Torpedo Bats Are Changing Baseball
A new kind of baseball bat may be helping hitters knock the ball out of the park.

© New York Yankees/Getty Images
Anthony Volpe of the New York Yankees uses a torpedo bat to hit a home run in the ninth inning against the Arizona Diamondbacks.
A new kind of baseball bat has taken Major League Baseball by storm. But is the “torpedo bat” worthy of all the hype?
The torpedo bat was developed after scientists employed by the New York Yankees did a study to find out how to increase the speed at which the ball travels after it’s been batted. The scientists noticed that batters were hitting the ball with a lower part of the bat than expected. This led to the invention of the torpedo bat.
On the torpedo bat, the mass of the bat is lower down—closer to the “sweet spot,” where batters usually hit the ball. The goal is to pack the power of the bat into the sweet spot for maximum impact on the ball.
The torpedo bat was made available to Major League Baseball teams last season, but few players showed much interest in trying out a new bat design. Then, in March 2025, the Yankees hit nine home runs in three games using torpedo bats. When Yankees announcer Michael Kay pointed out the new bats, everyone paid attention.
Since then, baseball bat manufacturers have received tons of orders for torpedo bats from MLB teams as well as the public. In professional baseball, pitchers have been improving their performance for years, making it harder for batters to hit the ball. The torpedo bat may give batters a chance to catch up.

© New York Yankees/Getty Images
Cody Bellinger of the New York Yankees holds a torpedo bat during batting practice on March 27, 2025.
“The benefit for me is, I like the weight distribution,” Yankees outfielder Cody Bellinger told MLB.com. “Personally, the weight is closer to my hands, so I feel as if [the bat] is lighter in a way.”
Not everyone is convinced that the torpedo bat actually helps batters. Some, like Anthony Volpe of the Yankees, say it might be a placebo effect. A placebo effect occurs when a method or remedy works because the person believes it works—not because the remedy itself really does anything. Still, Volpe uses a torpedo bat.
“It’s probably just a placebo,” Volpe told MLB.com. “A lot of it is just looking up at your bat and seeing how big the barrel is, but it’s exciting. I think [anything that] gives you confidence, it helps.”
It’s also possible that the torpedo bat is not a placebo but the real deal. If that’s true, baseball fans might start to see a lot more home runs.